Tag: windows

Recently, I’ve been working on a project with one of my TE colleagues, who hails from the “developer” side of the house. One of the challenges I have being interested in infrastructure and less interested in writing applications is that I’m often lacking something to build infrastructure for. So this has been a great opportunity to have something to focus spending my Azure credits on.

So for this project, we agreed to combine some of the things she wanted to do (Internet of Things, PowerBI, Bots, etc) with some of things I wanted to learn more about, like Containers and Service Fabric. The result was an idea for a sensor that would detect soil humidity and air temperature (IoT) for plants, report that data to the cloud for collection (via IoT Hub and CosmosDB) and make that data available via PowerBI for review. Ideally, having a Bot that lets me know when my plants need watering would really help with my lack of a green thumb. 🙂

As part of this we needed to be able to deploy an API that took the data from the IoT Hub and moved it the database. We also needed a front-end web application to show the collection of information. Both of these applications were going to be written in Node.js.

Now before you start tearing apart what is clearly going to be over-kill for this size of a project, keep in mind we know we can do all of this with PaaS offerings. But that would be less “fun”! You can check out the project at https://github.com/jcocchi/IoTPlantWatering and see that we’ve listed out many of the possible architecture scenarios. However, this post is about putting one of those Node.js applications in a container.

Step 1: Get Node.js onto a Windows Server Core container

Now, you’ll find plenty of information on the Web about creating a Docker container with Node.js, particularly if you’d like to run that on Linux. Combine that with the fact that Node.js is most easily installed on Windows with the MSI and you’ll find a lot less documentation about getting it on a Windows container. However, I came across this somewhat dated documentation and sample which got me started. It’s circa November 2016, which is a lifetime ago at this point and references Server 2016 TP 3 when Microsoft had a choice between managing Windows containers with PowerShell or Docker. I edited the HybridInstaller.ps1 script to download the latest version of Node.js and then followed the rest of the instructions in the “docker-managed” section.

The key bits are to download the HybridInstaller.ps1 and dockerfile to a new folder, then run:

Docker build -t windowswithnodejs:v1 C:\YOUR\FOLDER

You’ll end up with an image tagged “windowswithnodejs:v1” that you can then use as a base for the next steps.

Step 2: Make Sure Node IS actually installed

At this point I had a local image of my container available to run and I wanted to make sure that I really did install Node.js correctly. For that, you can find some handy instructions here for connecting interactively to a Windows container. The whole Wiki is actually very informative if you are new to Windows containers.

Step 3: Install A Node.js Application

We have two Node.js applications in our project, but I started with the simpler of the two – the RecieveHubMessages app. My project partner had nicely detailed the installation process and dependencies so I was able to clone the application code to my desktop, create the necessary .ENV file (because you don’t want your secrets in GitHub!) and put together a dockerfile to build a fresh image based off my image with Node.js already installed. The process is exactly the same as Step #1 (above) just using DOCKER BUILD with a different docker file and folder with the right application code in it.

After this was complete, I ran a container with this new image, connected to it and confirmed that the application was running. Since our goal was to be able to deploy this application in Azure, I also created an Azure Container Registry to host the image. From there, I was able to deploy it to Azure Container Services (using Kubernetes) and Azure Service Fabric. (More later on the differences between ACS and Service Fabric.)